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Where Are Last Year's Winners Now?
Last fall, BusinessWeek.com readers chose the top
five in our inaugural Best Entrepreneurs Under 25
contest. A year later, they're flourishing.
by Jeffrey Gangemi
October 2006
Last year, BusinessWeek.com set out to find the best
young entrepreneurs in the U.S. by soliciting
nominations from readers, whittling them down to a
group of 20 finalists, and then asking readers to
vote on which had the most promising businesses.
When the dust cleared, five winners emerged-five
ideas that the BusinessWeek.com readership believed
to be the cream of the crop (see BusinessWeek.com,
12/1/05, "The Best Entrepreneurs Under 25").
So where are those five winners now? How have their
businesses changed over the past year? And with
another year of perspective, what can they tell us
about being a young entrepreneur in today's market?
Rosy pictures emerged when we checked back with each
of the businesses: They've all experienced
significant growth, and most of them are expanding
into new areas. The most significant growth occurred
at Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook-its valuation now tops
$1 billion (see BusinessWeek.com, 2/28/06, "Facebook's
On the Block"). Anand Chhatpar and his brainstormers-for-hire,
Brain Reactions, experienced 300% revenue growth.
And GotVMail's David Hauser and Siamak Taghaddos
have more than doubled the number of companies
subscribing to their virtual phone-system services.
Extending the Brand
Growth hasn't been the only positive for last year's
winners. They've also changed their goals. Last
year, Joanna Alberti entered BusinessWeek.com's top
five with high hopes for expanding her successful
greeting-card business, philoSophie's, and licensing
her trademark character, Sophie. But because she
feels her company still relies on her personal touch
(she includes handwritten thank-you notes with most
orders), Alberti has worked to maintain control over
the brand, resisting the urge to license to just
anyone.
While carefully managing her success, Alberti has
also accomplished what several of last year's
winners have managed to do: extend their company's
brand. Alberti launched a new Web site,
joannanicole.com, to promote her custom illustration
work, through which she has branched out beyond her
trademark character (see BusinessWeek.com, 9/19/06,
"philoSophie's for Growth").
Brain Reactions' Chhatpar is also working to expand
his company's global reach through its just-launched
Web site, brainreactions.net, which provides a way
for his business to conduct professional
brainstorming for multinational companies remotely.
Last year's winners have been active in spreading
their startup know-how to other aspiring
entrepreneurs. Siamak Taghaddos recently returned to
his alma mater, Babson College, to give a talk about
his experience starting a successful company. When
he ventured back on campus for the first time in a
while, Taghaddos says he was struck by the quality
of both the business ideas and the students starting
those businesses. "I made a joke with other alumni
that if I were applying today, I don't think I'd get
in," says Taghaddos.
Advantage, Young Turks
And last year's winners agree that today's savvy
young entrepreneurs have a number of advantages over
previous generations. Business-plan contests and
funding opportunities, many of which are now
organized through universities, offer them
unprecedented support (see BusinessWeek.com,
10/30/06, "Young Entrepreneurs"). The continued rise
of social-networking sites offers another leg up.
Small companies can spread the word about their
products and services with little or no capital.
But it's more than just social networks that makes
now a great time to be a young entrepreneur. Other
tools enable the young and the financially strapped
to avoid previously unavoidable overhead costs,
making entrepreneurship the career of choice for
more and more young people.
"We call people around the world for almost free
'cause of Skype. We have document collaboration
through free open-source technology. It's so easy to
set up your own Web site or incorporate an LLC
online. It's a great time to be a young
entrepreneur," says Chhatpar.
Gangemi is a reporter for BusinessWeek.com in New
York.
